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Google Advertising Databases The Almighty Buck The Internet Politics

Google Releases a Searchable Database of US Political Ads (techcrunch.com) 46

An anonymous reader quotes a report from TechCrunch: In an effort to provide more transparency and deliver on a promise to Congress, Google just published an archive of political ads that have run on its platform. Google's new database, which it calls the Ad Library, is searchable through a dedicated launch page. Anyone can search for and filter ads, viewing them by candidate name or advertiser, spend, the dates the ads were live, impressions and type. For anyone looking for the biggest ad budget or the farthest reaching political ad, the ads can be sorted by spend, impressions and recency, as well. Google also provided a report on the data, showing ad spend by U.S. state, by advertiser and by top keywords.
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Google Releases a Searchable Database of US Political Ads

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  • by Hognoxious ( 631665 ) on Thursday August 16, 2018 @09:13AM (#57136690) Homepage Journal

    Does it include Russian US political ads?

    Hypothetically, I mean, if such a thing existed.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    If the actual source of the money can be discovered, not "citizens for motherhood and apple pie" shell fronts, this could be most useful. "Follow the money."

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday August 16, 2018 @09:18AM (#57136724)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • I think this sort of information is desperately needed. Unfortunately almost nobody who votes actually gives a shit about any of this data nor does it change minds. All it does is tell us who the puppet masters are that are feeding the current political propaganda. Unless this somehow translates into actual restrictions on how and where the money is spent it is purely an academic exercise.

    • Yeah but I think transparency is really all that is needed. If there is anything the 2016 election in the US taught us it is that political ads... aren't all that relevant. We live in a networked society now and it is our circles of peers and the information we share between us that influences us most. Jeb Bush spent like 120 million in the primary... wasn't even a contender. At one point it was noted that Trump had $1.2 million on hand vs Hillary Clinton's had $42.4 million. The total figures I've seen
      • Yeah but I think transparency is really all that is needed.

        I disagree. There has to be legal consequences or else nothing will change. I don't think any amount of transparency will matter unless it either results in legal consequences or actually affects election outcomes. Currently neither of those occur as far as I can tell because we have a delusional Supreme Court which seems to be hallucinating that having more money should entitle one to more free speech and a proportionately bigger voice in elections.

        If there is anything the 2016 election in the US taught us it is that political ads... aren't all that relevant.

        I presume you are talking about the presidential race.

        • by Obfuscant ( 592200 ) on Thursday August 16, 2018 @11:57AM (#57137724)

          I disagree. There has to be legal consequences or else nothing will change.

          Legal consequences for the exercise of first amendment rights. An interesting concept. Which part of "congress shall make no laws" is confusing? Or is it the part of "free speech" where someone saying "I support John Doe for Congress" is covered by the first amendment?

          we have a delusional Supreme Court which seems to be hallucinating that having more money should entitle one to more free speech and a proportionately bigger voice in elections.

          Ahhh, now I get it. You think "free speech" means "free as in beer". It doesn't make sense to you that exercising the right to free speech might cost money, and that telling someone they can't spend their money is essentially telling them they can't participate in "free speech". "Free speech" is apparently supposed to mean whatever can be said without having to pay for it to be disseminated.

          and a proportionately bigger voice in elections.

          "Voice" in an election is called a "ballot". More money does not mean more ballots. "Voice" in the arena of political speech costs money -- so yes, the more money you have the more you can disseminate your ideas. How terrible! But then, that's why there are things called "donations", so like-minded people (or all union employees) can pool their money and improve the dissemination of their speech. How wonderful! The natural outcome of that is that people with unpopular ideas don't get donations. How terrible!

      • by ranton ( 36917 )

        At one point it was noted that Trump had $1.2 million on hand vs Hillary Clinton's had $42.4 million

        While that may have been true at one point in the election, actual spending by both candidates (and super pacs) was $1.2 billion for Clinton and $650 million for Trump source [bloomberg.com].

        If there is anything the 2016 election in the US taught us it is that political ads... aren't all that relevant.

        What is probably should teach us is that paid political ads aren't all that relevant. Free advertising in social media and new channels are far more relevant. One marketing research firm [mediaquant.net] estimates that Trump benefited from $4.96 billion in free advertising while Clinton benefited from $3.24 billion. Both of these figures are far highe

        • One marketing research firm estimates that Trump benefited from $4.96 billion in free advertising while Clinton benefited from $3.24 billion.

          It is fascinating to read that linked material. If you do, you will see that it is very biased against Trump. They refer to him "bask[ing] in the attention and validation" but don't say the same for Clinton.

          What I wanted to see was whether they differentiated between positive and negative "free advertising", and they did not. They counted all coverage as positive "dollars", even though they acknowledged that the media coverage was "23%" towards the negative for Trump, but close to even for Clinton.

          They e

      • Transparency is great if the amount of information is small enough that you ever hope to digest it all. It's terrible when it's a useless sea of information that you can never understand fully. If you leave it to the media to digest, then you have to fully trust them.

    • Power (Score:5, Insightful)

      by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Thursday August 16, 2018 @09:53AM (#57136898)

      And who will decide what the restrictions on political ad spending will be? The current president and legislature of the federal US government? You think that's a good idea?

      It's great that you are thinking in terms of money. You also need to think in terms of power. If you give "the good guys" the power to do something, you're also giving "the bad guys" the power to do the exact same thing.

  • by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Thursday August 16, 2018 @09:52AM (#57136888) Journal
    If mere money had the political power that we attribute to it, we'd be discussing the legacy of President Forbes.
    • If mere money had the political power that we attribute to it, we'd be discussing the legacy of President Soros.

      FTFY.

      • Steve Forbes is worth a little over $500 million.
        George Soros, favorite whipping boy of Alt-right wackos, is worth a little over $8 Billion.

        Michael Bloomberg, three term mayor of New York City after 9/11 who swapped political parties to win the election, is worth over $50 billion.

  • I tried a couple of searches for Canadian political parties and it didn't turn up anything at all. Is this completely US-centric?
  • I think the really interesting data would be the content, especially in state/local politics. You could do a breakdown of "main issues"
    - by region to zero in on what the politicians *believe* are the issues, then cross-reference that with issue polls
    - by party, to determine whether parties are more interested in presenting a monolithic agenda or an agenda based on constituents
    - by key words used in ad, to get a big picture of the political zeitgeist. (Looks like you can only for specific candidates and adve

  • ... the lengths they will go to in trying to make *someone* read their ads.

  • This is great, but not what we really need. We really need to have a "follow the money" tool from Google.

    We need two things for politicians. 1. Who gave or loaned them what and when. Every penny they received or was spent on their behalf needs to be traceable to *exactly* who gave it. 2. What did the candidate *spend* this money on? Every penny they spend needs to be traceable to it's destination, all the way down to who catered the buffet at the election night party.

    IF we had this, it would immediately

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